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Drawing on autotheoretical methods, this insightful volume explores
how LGBTQ+ scholars, practitioners, and scholar-practitioners exist
within and negotiate an insider/outsider paradox within higher
education, highlighting issues of affect, legibility, and
embodiment. The first of a two-volume series, this book foregrounds
the experiences of LGBTQ+ higher education scholars and
practitioners in the United States as they navigate
cisheteronormative culture, structures, practices, and policies on
campus. Through theorization of contributors' lived experiences in
relation to identity and the concept of queerness as being, the
volume posits queer identity as embodied resistance and
demonstrates how this plays out within an insider/outsider paradox.
An innovative theoretical framing, this text artfully exemplifies
how queer and trans people exist simultaneously as both insider and
outsider in university communities and deepens understanding of how
critical narratives might inform institutional transformation and
drives toward equity. The book then looks to the future, discussing
implications for research and practice, using the lessons learned
from the chapter authors. Embellished with a plethora of diverse
firsthand contributions and innovative scholarship, this book will
be of interest to students and scholars of queer and trans studies,
student affairs, gender and sexuality studies, and higher
education, as well as those seeking to understand the experiences
of LGBTQ+ higher education scholars and practitioners as they
navigate central tensions in their practice.
Guided by the scholarly personal narratives of LGBTQ+ higher
education scholars, practitioners, and scholar-practitioners, this
informative volume explores how individuals exist within and
experience the insider/outsider paradox within higher education as
they engage in disruption, queer methods, and action. The second of
a two-volume series, this book relates to the firsthand accounts
and personal stories of the contributors in order to illustrate the
challenges and opportunities that exist for queer and trans people.
Framed through the concept of queerness as doing, this book takes
up the important question of what it means to occupy both positions
of oppression and degrees of privilege within society and in the
context of work. It discusses how stories depict the nuances of the
insider/outsider paradox relative to practicing queerness as a
politic while identifying as part of the LGBTQ+ community in higher
education settings. The book then looks to the future, discussing
implications for research and practice, using the lessons learned
from the chapter authors. Comprised of firsthand contributions and
innovative scholarship, this book will be of interest to students
and scholars of queer and trans studies, student affairs, gender
and sexuality studies, and higher education, as well as those
seeking to understand the experiences of LGBTQ+ scholars and
practitioners as they navigate central tensions in their
scholarship and practice.
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